(London 11 June 2013) Harris English won golf's FedEx St. Jude Classic by two shots for his first title on the U.S. PGA Tour and in so doing firmly elevated the Sport Trading Club savant to the highest echelons of great golf gurus.

On the eve of the tournament the Sports Trading Club revealed that she had chosen Harris English, an American in only his second season on the US PGA Tour, at 66-1 to win the St Jude Classic in Memphis, Tennessee.

English, 23, shot a 1-under-par 69 during the final round at TPC, to finish with a four-round total of 12 under 268. English received $1.01 million for the victory.

There has been worldwide interest in the Sports Trading Club www.sportstradingclub.com) golf savant since last month when she selected Billy Horschel to record his first PGA Tour victory in the Zurich Classic despite him being a 36-1 outsider.

Her two extraordinary successes only a few weeks apart has stunned the sports betting world who fear the consequences of her accuracy.

Her selection last month of Billy Horschel and this week of Harris English reinforces the belief that the Sports Trading Club now has an incredible inside advantage with trading on golf, a sport which sees multi-million dollars sums wagered weekly.

The Sports Trading Club created The Insight Project, a world first with the study of savants and sports trading.

It is led by their scientific director Dr. Allan Snyder, FRS who, for some 20 years, has conducted ground breaking research on savants at both the Australian National University and the University of Sydney.

"We have embraced the extraordinary skills of savants to give ourselves a unique advantage," said Dr Snyder.

"Certain savants unmask patterns that others can't see and are bewilderingly quick at performing calculations and recalling enormous amounts of data, " he said.

Dr. Snyder, himself a living genius and brilliant learned scholar, believes that certain savants have a distinct advantage in sports trading, which gives the Sports Trading Club a diagnostic edge that no one else can achieve.

Dr Snyder would say little about the identity of the Savant except that she lives in the USA and four years ago she had never even watched a game of golf.

A small subset of autistics, known as savants, can perform super specialised mental feats.

Savant syndrome is a condition in which a person demonstrates profound and prodigious capacities and abilities far in excess of what would be considered normal.

Perhaps the most famous savant was Dustin Hoffman's character in ''Rain Man,'' who could count hundreds of matchsticks at a glance.

But the truth has often been even stranger: one celebrated savant in turn-of-the century Vienna could calculate the day of the week for every date since the birth of Christ.

Other savants can speak dozens of languages without formally studying any of them or can reproduce music at the piano after only a single hearing."

The Sports Trading Club, which operates as a private investors group in England, recently allowed the general public to become associate members in Australia.

It reported a 305% profit for the first quarter of 2013 sending a clear message to investors that trading on sports and prediction markets is an emerging industry to rival traditional financial markets.

In December last year it announced a multi-million pound partnership in Australia and followed Britain's largest bookmaker, William Hill, into the booming Aussie sports market.

"Our move to Australia has proven to be astute. A person who invested $50,000 on January 1 of this year has seen that grow to $312,532 in five months," Mr Robin said.

"It is high reward for low risk, as at no time did we invest more than one per cent of the fund into any one trade," he said.

STC recently expanded into South Africa and South Korea is now looking toward expanding throughout Europe and Asia.

STC is currently in negotiations with a joint venture partner for the Macau market.